Film director James Mangold also tells  Esther McCarthy why he focused on that crucial early period in Dylan's career
Things seem to have gone well on both fronts for A Complete Unknown, as Timothée Chalamet’s Bob Dylan movie is performing well at the box office and earning rave reviews from critics and fans. That doesn’t mean,
TO borrow the title of a Bob Dylan song, it was a case of “one more cup of coffee” for the film director. (Or perhaps not, as you’ll see.) When James Mangold got stuck into making his biopic A
BEFORE Dune, before Wonka, before he met girlfriend Kylie Jenner, Timothée Chalamet signed up for his most challenging role . . .   . . . to play a young Bob Dylan in the biopic A Complete
On January 16, 2025, in the sumptuous surroundings of the Hotel Bristol in Paris, a press conference was held with Timothée Chalamet, Edward Norton, Monica Barbaro and director James Mangold to mark the eagerly-awaited release of Un Parfait Inconnu, a daring biopic devoted to Bob Dylan.
In Edward Norton’s uncanny performance as Seeger ... But he kept the flame alive, and Joan Baez and Peter Yarrow and Bob Dylan say that seeing Seeger in the ’50s was part of why they became ...
Despite his somewhat negative encounter with the Blowin’ In The Wind singer, Young continued to praise the film, which stars Timothée Chalamet as a young Dylan, “This movie is a great tribute to his life and music. I think if you love Bob’s music you should see this great movie. I loved it.”
Liz Thomson is the author of Joan Baez: The Last Leaf and the revising editor of Robert Shelton’s biography Bob Dylan: No Direction Home. She is the founder of The Village Trip, an annual festival celebrating Greenwich Village.
Friend of the show and TV expert Scott Bryan stops by for his annual "review of the year
The 29-year-old propped the bike on its stand on the red carpet and appeared to take a picture of the bike on his phone - part of the process of completing the hire period through the app.
Timothée Chalamet humorously hinted about the smelliest actor he's worked with during a BBC Radio 1 interview.
Bob Dylan’s nonchalance and elusive nature is commendably portrayed by Timothée Chalamet with charm, vulnerability and authenticity.